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You're welcome
You have picked this subject to get hands-on experience with the language? What books are you using?
I are Troll
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Yeah I finished reading and going through Visual Studio 2008 Step by Step, which was long and boring...
So I decided it would be better if I actually code from scratch.
Although I will have to ask people like this, go through help, etc, at least I would understand it after I have finished.
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Taku Kawamoto wrote: Yeah I finished reading and going through Visual Studio 2008 Step by Step, which was long and boring...
Every book it's audience, some people do better if faced with some tutorials and a decent reference-manual. Best would be to get multiple books on VB.NET. You can find lots of interesting resources here[^]
Taku Kawamoto wrote: So I decided it would be better if I actually code from scratch.
Although I will have to ask people like this, go through help, etc, at least I would understand it after I have finished.
Good attitude
I are Troll
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Sorry for the delayed reply but I was tavelling home from work. I see that you have some good advice now from other people, so I hope your project goes well. And forget about the Application.MakeFolderOrganizer() method, it's not going to help you in this case
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First off, you say you are new to VB08, are you new to vb in general?
If so, start with the basics, like forms and texts and all the standard controls to become familiar, then start moving into folder/file operations.
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I have been through the 'Visual Studio 2008 Step by Step' book, but I am still new to VB in general.
Sorry, what do you mean by the basics? ie. forms, texts.
And also, would you be able to tell me what kind of application is possible to make using forms, texts.
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Doesn't it sound like you have, going by your response to Jay.
If you had been through it you would know that the majority of desktop applications are built around Forms (i.e. the gui that the user sees).
Have you considered knitting as a career path instead?
modified on Tuesday, February 2, 2010 1:03 PM
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Knitting? I don't think from the A levels I do knitting is a choice really...
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Ok........i was joking.
VB is just a blank canvas...you can do virtually anything you want.
You need to start by understanding all the basics, forms manipulation (the things the user interacts with), basic controls, list boxes, treeviews, labels, text boxes, menus etc.
You then can start understanding more of the available classes and methods that are part of the .net framework. They provide things like, file operations, database operations, graphics etc etc.
Then you just need to piece it all together to do want you want your application to achieve.
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I understand that VB uses B as the language and the Visual is the GUI side of the application making.
Could you tell me, to understand the basics more, which books, sites, would you recommend me to read?
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I would suggest that you look at the How-To videos on the MSDN[^] website. These are great walkthroughs on some key areas of the .net framework/VB
Books wise, i have mainly used the various subject area books available from Wrox[^], but there is loads of stuff for free on the Net.
Don't forget all the articles that are available off of this site, the guys on CP really know their onions and produce some great stuff. There hard work and effort is really appreciated by the CP community.
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Okey I'll have a look at it.
Thanks for the advise!!
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I think you need a 2-step approach just to learn the language.
1. Basic Step: From the book "Microsoft Visual Basic 2008 Step By Step" by Michael Halvorson. This is just to get your feet wet with Visual Basic .Net.
2. Advanced: From any of Francesco Balena's books on Visual Basic. This will build on the knowledge already learnt.
Remember: This is not an instant solution. You need to build knowledge slowly and steadily. Allot time to recollect and ruminate.
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i hv a clock application . how can make it show on desktop when user start computer. as in window vista
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The 'applications' on the desktop, are actually gadgets. If you want something like them i suggest you search for gadget development on google.
If you just want a normal application to start when the user logs in, place a shortcut to the executable in the startup folder under the relevant users profile.
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Hi,
I have developed a rountine that builds a string using the StringBuilder class and then creates a CSV file from the string. The CSV file is then used to import data into another application. However, after creating the CSV file there is BOM at the start of the file which is preventing me from importing into the 3rd party application.
My question is how can I create the CSV file without the BOM?
Thanks for your time.
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Can you please post some code snippets (like creating this string by your StringBuilder, writing the CSV file, ...), cause I never heard of such a strange behaviour.
Greetings
Covean
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BOM will only appear if you have put it there.
Definitely need to see code to work out where it is being generated.
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Thanks both of you but I have resolved it. I was using:
Dim outFile As IO.StreamWriter = My.Computer.FileSystem.OpenTextFileWriter(csvFile, False)
which was creating the file as UFT-8 which seemd to insert the BOM. I have changed it to:
Dim outFile As IO.StreamWriter = My.Computer.FileSystem.OpenTextFileWriter(csvFile, False, System.Text.Encoding.ASCII)
which doesn't insert the BOM.
Thanks for your time.
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As you discovered there is a difference between UTF-8 and ASCII. UTF-8 files always have the header 0xEF 0xBB 0xBF so any program reading text files should check for this and not just assume the content is pure ASCII. C# programs tend to handle this automatically in most cases.
MVP 2010 - are they mad?
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Another lesson learned
Thanks
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Liqz wrote: Another lesson learned
Same here, I learned it the hard way ...
MVP 2010 - are they mad?
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At work I use Access, and have no problem attaching an Access DB to my projects, but I wish to use Open Office Base as my data source, for reasons of cheapness (I am mean!).
How can I attach this to my project in VB?
I open Data Source Configuration Wizard and am presented with Access, SQL Server Compact or SQL Server Database.
Before I go wasting my time, any advice?
Or am I stuck with Access?
------------------------------------
I will never again mention that I was the poster of the One Millionth Lounge Post, nor that it was complete drivel. Dalek Dave
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Dalek Dave wrote: my project in VB
you're not just cheap.
Luc Pattyn [Forum Guidelines] [Why QA sucks] [My Articles]
I only read code that is properly formatted, adding PRE tags is the easiest way to obtain that. [The QA section does it automatically now, I hope we soon get it on regular forums as well]
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Hey, unfair, my home stuff is c#!
Work demands mean VB, cut me some slack
------------------------------------
I will never again mention that I was the poster of the One Millionth Lounge Post, nor that it was complete drivel. Dalek Dave
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